The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete

The study investigates on natural fiber reinforced concrete (NFRC) and its effects when exposed to fire. Three natural fibers are considered in this study, and these are abaca, coir, and rice husk fibers. Two types of fiber content percentage were used to observe the trend of possible strength incre...

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Main Authors: Daulo, Dustin Virgil M., Samson, Adonis L., Jr., Sy, Silver, Villanueva, Therence
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2014
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/10554
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_bachelors-111992021-12-06T10:05:01Z The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete Daulo, Dustin Virgil M. Samson, Adonis L., Jr. Sy, Silver Villanueva, Therence The study investigates on natural fiber reinforced concrete (NFRC) and its effects when exposed to fire. Three natural fibers are considered in this study, and these are abaca, coir, and rice husk fibers. Two types of fiber content percentage were used to observe the trend of possible strength increase and reduction due to fire exposure. The optimal values in terms of volume fraction were determined from previous studies for each fiber (0.5 for abaca, 1.0 for coir, 1.5 for rice husk). To evaluate the performance of NFRCs, the performance of plain concrete is used as reference. Compressive strength and splitting tensile strength were determined for the NFRC and plain concrete specimens. Paired-sample T-test statistical analysis was used to determine the significance in terms of increase and reduction in strength of the NFRCs with respect to the plain concrete. The optimal value for abaca fiber displayed the greatest tensile strength before exposure to fire (3.362 MPa). It was then determined that the optimal value for coir fiber displayed the greatest increase in compressive and tensile strength (27.08 MPa and 3.29 MPa, respectively) among the three fibers just before it was exposed to fire. However, it also displayed the greatest decrease in tensile strength after it was exposed to fire. The optimal value for rice husk fiber displayed the greatest decrease in compressive strength after exposure to fire, displaying a 19.65% decrease. 2014-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/10554 Bachelor's Theses English Animo Repository Fiber-reinforced concrete Concrete slabs--Standards Concrete panels--Standards Civil Engineering
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Fiber-reinforced concrete
Concrete slabs--Standards
Concrete panels--Standards
Civil Engineering
spellingShingle Fiber-reinforced concrete
Concrete slabs--Standards
Concrete panels--Standards
Civil Engineering
Daulo, Dustin Virgil M.
Samson, Adonis L., Jr.
Sy, Silver
Villanueva, Therence
The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete
description The study investigates on natural fiber reinforced concrete (NFRC) and its effects when exposed to fire. Three natural fibers are considered in this study, and these are abaca, coir, and rice husk fibers. Two types of fiber content percentage were used to observe the trend of possible strength increase and reduction due to fire exposure. The optimal values in terms of volume fraction were determined from previous studies for each fiber (0.5 for abaca, 1.0 for coir, 1.5 for rice husk). To evaluate the performance of NFRCs, the performance of plain concrete is used as reference. Compressive strength and splitting tensile strength were determined for the NFRC and plain concrete specimens. Paired-sample T-test statistical analysis was used to determine the significance in terms of increase and reduction in strength of the NFRCs with respect to the plain concrete. The optimal value for abaca fiber displayed the greatest tensile strength before exposure to fire (3.362 MPa). It was then determined that the optimal value for coir fiber displayed the greatest increase in compressive and tensile strength (27.08 MPa and 3.29 MPa, respectively) among the three fibers just before it was exposed to fire. However, it also displayed the greatest decrease in tensile strength after it was exposed to fire. The optimal value for rice husk fiber displayed the greatest decrease in compressive strength after exposure to fire, displaying a 19.65% decrease.
format text
author Daulo, Dustin Virgil M.
Samson, Adonis L., Jr.
Sy, Silver
Villanueva, Therence
author_facet Daulo, Dustin Virgil M.
Samson, Adonis L., Jr.
Sy, Silver
Villanueva, Therence
author_sort Daulo, Dustin Virgil M.
title The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete
title_short The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete
title_full The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete
title_fullStr The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete
title_full_unstemmed The effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete
title_sort effects of fire on compressive and tensile strength of natural fiber-reinforced concrete
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2014
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/10554
_version_ 1719000506716651520